Clayoquot Wilderness Resort : Canada
By David Ellis
"You take the bells, and I’ll take the pepper spray and the rifle,”
says John ‘Cowboy’ Caton. “There’s one-point-five bears to every square
kilometre out there – you’re in wilderness country now.”
We’d
accepted Cowboy John’s invitation to what we’d been assured would be a
nice leisurely embrace with nature, not dodging grizzlies, in a
timeless rainforest on the west coast of Canada’s Vancouver Island.
And
if we were going into “wilderness country,” we’d like to know what it
was that we were leaving: Clayoquot Wilderness Resort, our digs for the
previous night, would have to be amongst the most remote we’d
encountered in decades of searching.
Not that we were
complaining – we’d be the first to put our hands up if an invitation
came our way again – for the aptly-named Clayoquot (it means ‘Calm
Water’) is for the serious seeker of communing with nature, strolls on
k’s of empty beaches, walks through cedar and rainforests, and a quiet
so almost-cuttable you could target a pine needle hitting the water at
a hundred paces.
Yet all this remoteness was coupled with
shameless indulgence. For while Clayoquot is accessible only by boat
from the nearest town, Tofino 15 minutes away or seaplane, there’s no
skimping on the necessities of life: good food, good wine and a good
bed.
A crackling log fire on cooler nights greets travellers to
The Great Room for recounting experiences at day’s end, the bar’s
stocked to the rafters by obvious devotees for devotees, and just
twenty cosey deluxe and luxury tents look out over the mirrored waters
of Clayoquot Sound.
And from his kitchen, Chef Tim May treats
guests to such salivating signature dishes as Grilled Clayoquot Sound
Oyster Chowder and Prosciutto Wrapped Halibut Fillets, locally caught
salmon or crab, freshest local beef, venison and farm vegetables… and
afterwards delights like mountains of wild berries and cream, or
summery cheesecakes….
“Wear the bells around your wrist,” says
the affable Cowboy from under an unlikely Akubra that’s his constant
companion. “They let the bears know we’re coming; they’ll usually
amble off and just watch us.”
We have a look at a waterfall-fed
lake that’s great for summer swimming, and the stables from which
resort guides take guests off on daytime trail rides or overnight trips
to remote forest camps. And as we step out onto a pristine
strip of beach, we sight our first bear – less than a cricket pitch
length along the sand from us.
“He’s around 70kg, I reckon,”
says Cowboy, a partner in the Resort after a major coronary attack put
paid to an over-stressful life as a music talent scout and recording
artist manager. “Solid little fellas aren’t they?” he
remarks of the black bear, that seems to be little more than waist
height and as wide as he is high.
He gawks at us for a few
minutes before losing interest in yet more boring tourists, and ambles
off, leaving us to capture our Close Encounter in a myriad shaky photos
of his disappearing back-side.
We see a handful more
bears during the afternoon, and by evening are feeling nonchalant and
brave: Hey, we’ve survived a day in Bear Country.
Then
Cowboy brings us back to earth. “Folks think they can climb a tree to
escape a cranky bear,” he observes. “But the black ones climb up after
you – and the grizzlies just shake the tree ‘til you fall out….
“You
know, we’ve only seen five today, so that means with 1.5 to the square
kilometre, we need to run into a dozen more in the next fifteen
minutes…”
We’re off. That bar, Chef Tim’s delights and our
deluxe ‘Outpost’ style tent with its Queen Bed suddenly holds greater
appeal than confirming Cowboy’s mathematics.
Clayoquot
Wilderness Resort is open May to September with package stays of 3-, 4-
and 7-nights. Prices start from CAD$4750pp (approx AU$4778) twin-share
for 3-nights and including return 50-minute seaplane from Vancouver.
Also
included is All meals, snacks, beverages (including alcoholic,) massage
treatments, horseback riding, fishing, viewing bear, whale and marine
life, ocean and river kayaking, a Wild Side First Nations Interpretive
Walk, sailing, hiking, clay shooting, rock climbing, archery, swimming,
mountain biking, zip-lining, and painting and cooking lessons.
Details Canada & Alaska Specialist Holidays toll-free 1300 79 49 59.
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